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Johnstone, Lilith – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
This essay explores how and why English teachers, especially women, must unpack and honour the many facets of our autobiography that make up our experiences and identities in classroom practice. Drawing on the work of Jane Miller and Anne Turvey, it starts with a 'moment' with a Year 10 class. It calls for attention to be paid to the intensely…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Autobiographies, Females, Educational Practices
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Stoehr, Kathleen Jablon – Journal of Teacher Education, 2017
Mathematics educators agree elementary teachers should possess confidence and competence in teaching mathematics. Many prospective elementary teachers (particularly women) pursue careers in elementary teaching despite personal repeated experiences of mathematics anxiety. Previous studies of mathematics anxiety have tended to focus on physical…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Anxiety, Coping, Elementary School Teachers
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Taber, Nancy; Mojab, Shahrzad; VanderVliet, Cathy; Haghgou, Shirin; Paterson, Kate – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2017
This article is based on our Memoir Pedagogy Reading Circles research. Using an interpretative sociological case study methodology, we facilitated two groups that read and discussed women's memoirs as living texts of society, culture, and history; we read the self and the social through the personal narratives of violence, survival, and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Case Studies, Personal Narratives, Females
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Coia, Lesley; Taylor, Monica – Studying Teacher Education, 2013
What does it mean to be a feminist educator? How would we know if we were? We call ourselves feminist teachers and yet we have not focused on this identification and its influence on our teaching in some time. In this self-study, we set out to look at our practice-using co/autoethnography. As our study progressed, we began to realize that our…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Feminism, Epistemology, Teaching Methods
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Iftody, Tammy – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2013
As a means of exploring what "learning through experience" in teacher education might look like, situated self-narration is both conceptualized and performed here as the discursive practice through which already familiar and remembered experience may re-presented and re-organized from a forward-looking vantage point. Drawing on…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Personal Narratives, Memory, English Teachers
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Boisseau, T. J. – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2014
In searching for a way of teaching American history as something that truly belongs to women, and men, to the powerful as well as to those who lack power in a formal sense, as something that is not the story of white people with an interesting person of color charitably thrown in for good measure, Boisseau writes that while many influential…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, African American History, Females
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Jelinek, Estelle C. – College English, 1976
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Bibliographies, Course Descriptions, Females
Christensen, Linda – Rethinking Schools, Ltd, 2009
"Teaching for Joy and Justice" is the much-anticipated sequel to Linda Christensen's bestselling, "Reading, Writing, and Rising Up." Christensen is recognized as one of the country's finest teachers. Her latest book shows why. Through story upon story, Christensen demonstrates how she draws on students' lives and the world to teach poetry, essay,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Language Arts, Autobiographies, Literacy Education